Tradition, innovation collide at Wimbledon
London, June 20
Amelie Mauresmo stepped over the paint pots and surveyed the Centre Court, scene of her Wimbledon triumph last year but, without its roof, looking like a completely different arena.

Federer, Henin top seeds
Wimbledon, June 20
Four-time defending champion Roger Federer was seeded number one for Wimbledon today, with Justine Henin getting the top spot for the women.

Team India arrive in Belfast
Belfast, June 20
The 15-member Indian cricket team, led by skipper Rahul Dravid, today flew in here to play a three-match one-day international series against South Africa in Ireland.

Rahul Dravid and Sachin Tendulkar arrive at the Heathrow airport in London on Wednesday. —
AP/PTI photo

Bring on the Indians: Vaughan
Durham, June 20
England captain Michael Vaughan anticipates a sterner challenge
from India next month after his side completed a 3-0 series win
over West Indies yesterday.

England’s Steven Harmison
sprays champagne as Michael Vaughan and Monty Panesar lift the
series trophy after they beat the West Indies in the fourth Test
in Durham on Tuesday. England won the series 3-0. — AFP photo

PIL against Dhoni’s swimming pool
Ranchi, June 20
Indian vice-captain Mahendra Singh Dhoni’s plans to build a swimming pool in his new home seem to have got into fresh trouble with his neighbours after they filed a public interest suit against its construction on grounds that it would add to the colony’s water woes.

Paes-Damm in quarters
Hertogenbosh, June 20
Leander Paes and his Czech partner Martin Damm came from behind to shock top seeds Julien Benneteau and Nicolas Devilder of France and advance into the men’s doubles quarterfinal at the 353,450 euro Ordina Open here.

London, June 20
Amelie Mauresmo stepped over the paint pots and surveyed the Centre Court, scene of her Wimbledon triumph last year but, without its roof, looking like a completely different arena.

“Could be windy,” she said, as a stiff breeze whistled round the exposed seating and the cover protecting the famous green lawn billowed and sank.

Since Mauresmo and Roger Federer lifted two of the world’s most coveted tennis trophies, 300 builders, four tower cranes and countless diggers, lorries and power tools have turned the All England Club into a huge, muddy building site.

It is part of a three-year project to modernise facilities, add a retractable roof to the Centre Court playing area so action will not stop for rain, build a new sunken Court 2 and revamp others.

Part of Centre Court was reduced to its foundations but builders knew they had a deadline to get the stadium up and running, above all protecting the pristine playing surface, for the championships, which start on June 25.

“It will be the only time since 1922 there hasn’t been a roof at all,” Wimbledon chief executive Ian Ritchie told Reuters last week.

“It’ll be very different both to play and to visit as a spectator,” he said.

Ritchie believes one of the attractions of Centre Court was the enclosed, almost cloistered feel with the roof covering most seating areas. This year, he suggested, the atmosphere might be more informal. Next year the spectators will be covered again and in 2009 the moving roof over the court will be installed.

This is Ritchie’s second Wimbledon in charge and he bubbles with enthusiasm for the building project, for the tennis and for the institution that is the championships.

“Our view is that if you are a bit of an iconic sporting venue, if you keep the facilities the same you go backwards. The balance for us always is between tradition and innovation,” he said.

“There are some things that are sacrosanct: We’ll always play on grass; we believe it’s right for people to wear mostly white; we believe there shouldn’t be too much advertising around the place.

“That does not mean keeping a load of 1922 facilities. In some ways we are in quite a competitive market, particularly in the UK. There’s a new Wembley, a new Ascot, a new Emirates Stadium at Arsenal, a rebuilt Twickenham... “We take very seriously wanting to be at the top of the pile.” Wimbledon’s aim is to create a timeless, relaxed atmosphere “like a walk in an English country garden.”

But it is also a business with year-round commercial activities and an average surplus over the last few years of some $59.55 million.

“We are a private members club that has a bit of a do in the summer,” Ritchie joked. “But everyone is entirely focused on what is best for the championships...We’ve been going since 1877 and we have a long term view.”

One innovation that will add spice is the introduction of Hawk-eye, the line-call tracker, to be used for the first time, though only on Centre Court.

“If the technology is there you should use it,” Ritchie said.

“I’d hate somebody to win a match or lose a match on a bad call.” So the tradition of arguing with line judges in the “You cannot be serious!” manner of John McEnroe looks like a thing of the past.

Much will remain the same, however. The flower arrangements and window boxes are just coming into bloom. The strawberries are on order and the tea marquees are up. The paint pots will be put away and painters replaced by smart-uniformed door staff.

The courts are also looking flawless before the first players crush the grass.

“The head groundsman is really pleased because he thinks Centre Court is in better condition than before,” Ritchie said. “It’s had more wind and more sun, more air.” Mauresmo said she was pleased the court was playing true and hurried off to the practice grounds after a brief chat about the weather.

Weather is a constant preoccupation at Wimbledon and this year the Centre Court spectators will be more aware of it than ever. With the retractable roof in two years’ time they will not have to worry.

“Of course, the racing certainty in 2009 will be that we will have 13 days of unalloyed sunshine,” Ritchie mused. —
Reuters

Durham, June 20
England captain Michael Vaughan anticipates a sterner challenge from India next month after his side completed a 3-0 series win over West Indies yesterday.

England beat West Indies by seven wickets in the fourth Test with left-arm spinner Monty Panesar claiming five for 46 to turn the match at a time when West Indies were still hoping for a draw.

The series did not even come close to eliminating the embarrassment and pain at their 5-0 Ashes loss to Australia but at least showed England were back to winning ways. The first Test against India starts on July 19 at Lord’s.

“But I do believe in our conditions if we get the ball swinging like we know we can we can really put them under a lot of pressure.”

Vaughan, who also revealed that he had made his decision to quit the one-day captaincy during the unsuccessful World Cup campaign in the Caribbean, was especially pleased with the Durham win because two days were lost to the weather.

“Trying to force a victory from 165 for six on Monday looked a long shot but full credit to the batsmen and Paul Collingwood (128) in particular on his
home ground.

“We then went out and bowled with some intensity and put the ball in the right areas, swung it and then Monty produced his magic once again and Steve Harmison was back to somewhere near his best.” Panesar took a series-high 23 wickets.

Harmison’s revival was unexpected after it was disclosed earlier on Tuesday that he will have to undergo a herniaoperation, which the bowler hopes can be delayed until after the India series. He finished the day with two for 92 from
20 overs.

“Figures can sometimes be misleading because Steve Harmison was running in to bowl with five slips and there were plenty of gaps so there are runs around,” Vaughan said.

“I don’t look at the runs column when Steve Harmison is bowling, I look at the amount of pressure he’s creating.

“I don’t know too much about his hernia but I hope we will see Steve bowling as he did today against the Indians later in this summer.”

Panesar breaks into top 10

Dubai: Continuing his rise in international cricket, Monty Panesar became the highest rated England spinner in 30 years by breaking into the top-10 of LG ICC Test Rankings today.

With a tally of 23 wickets in the Test series against West Indies, Panesar rose six places in the latest charts to join teammate Matthew Hoggard at the sixth position on 721 points.

The 25-year-old left-armer is in the top-10 for the first time in his career and is now the highest-rated England spinner since Derek Underwood in 1977.

However, the slow left-armer still has some way to go to being the top-rated England spinner of all time. That honour remains with Surrey legend Tony Lock, who reached 912 ratings points during a home series against New Zealand in 1958.

Sri Lankan off spinner Muttiah Muralitharan is still the highest-ranked Test bowler with South African pacer Makhaya Ntini at second place.

In the batting list, Australian skipper Ricky Ponting still tops the list with Mohammad Yousuf of Pakistan at second place. Indian skipper Rahul Dravid occupies the eighth spot followed by Sachin Tendulkar at joint 16th position. —
Reuters,
PTI

Ranchi, June 20
Indian vice-captain Mahendra Singh Dhoni’s plans to build a swimming pool in his new home seem to have got into fresh trouble with his neighbours after they filed a public interest suit against its construction on grounds that it would add to the colony’s water woes.

Residents of Harmu Housing Colony here filed a PIL in the Jharkhand High Court yesterday, pleading that the pool’s construction be halted. They have also questioned the manner in which the Ranchi Regional Development Authority (RRDA) passed the building plans of the house and the pool.

They had earlier petitioned the RRDA and Jharkhand chief secretary in this regard.

Last week, a team of experts had given a clean chit to the pool in their report submitted to the RRDA. It said “there would not be any wastage of water by constructing the swimming pool”.

However, the first report submitted by the experts earlier this month had been turned down by the Urban Development Department (UDD), which sought a second report on the technical details.

The PIL also alleges that laws were violated while passing the blueprints of the pool and the adjoining house in the colony.

“The building plan of Dhoni’s house was passed in just one day. The RRDA overlooked the technical aspects before clearing it. There is a survey report that Harmu Housing Colony faces a water crisis,” said one of the petitioners.

The residents have alleged that the swimming pool will need 400,000 gallons of water, which will lead to a water scarcity in the neighbourhood.

The Jharkhand government had gifted the 5,000 sq ft plot in Harmu Housing Colony to Dhoni in November, 2005. —
IANS

Dr Ken Ho of Sydney’s Garvan Institute of Medical Research, and colleagues recently developed the blood test, with support from the World Anti-Doping Agency.

“This new test is more sensitive to human growth hormone than what we’ve had in the past,” Ho said. “My message to athletes would be to train harder instead of cheating.”

It has been notoriously difficult to identify athletes illegally using human growth hormone. Not only is the hormone naturally produced in the body, making it harder to detect synthetic versions, but also the concentrations of it normally circulating in the body vary enormously and can disappear within minutes.

Human growth hormone is produced by the pituitary gland and helps cells regenerate. Synthetic versions of the hormone are routinely prescribed to children with growth problems, or tuberculosis and AIDS patients who need to maintain their body weight.

It is also widely taken among some anti-aging advocates since it can improve skin elasticity. But improper use of the hormone can lead to problems including the nerve disorder acute carpal tunnel syndrome, diabetes, and unnatural growth of the bones.

The new test works by finding proteins triggered by the hormone. “We’ve been able to identify markers that show abuse by measuring when other hormones and proteins released by human growth hormone reach certain levels,” said Dr Olivier Rabin, WADA’s science director. Rabin said that these biological markers are not affected by any other differences between athletes, such as ethnicity, gender, or physiology.

WADA has already introduced another test, which identifies the synthetic version of human growth hormone in the body, on a limited scale. That test was in place at the Athens and Turin Olympic Games.

The agency hopes to use both tests together to maximise their chances of detection. But finding cheating athletes on a large scale will be difficult since the hormone can be detected only in blood. Only trace amounts are present in urine. And blood tests are not used as regularly as urine tests.— AP

Hertogenbosh, June 20
Leander Paes and his Czech partner Martin Damm came from behind to shock top seeds Julien Benneteau and Nicolas Devilder of France and advance into the men’s doubles quarterfinal at the 353,450 euro Ordina Open here.

In an edge-of-the-seat thriller yesterday, Paes-Damm dug in deep after losing the opening set and overcame the French duo 6-7, 7-5, 13-11 in match tiebreaker.

Mahesh-Justin crash out

New Delhi: Fourth seeds Mahesh Bhupathi and his American partner Justin Gimelstob made a shocking first-round exit from the Nottingham Open, losing to British wildcards Joshua Goodall and Ross Hutchins.

The Indo-American pair squandered a one-set lead to go down 7-5, 4-6, 8-10 in little over one-and-a-half-hour long match.

In a hard-fought contest, the fourth seeds won the opening set after breaking their rivals once but could not sustain the lead against the local favourites.

The wildcards broke Bhupathi and Gimelstob once to pocket the second set and take the match into super tie-breaker, which turned out to be an engrossing battle. —
PTI

Yalta (Ukraine), June 20
Grandmaster Krishnan Sasikiran suffered a shocking endgame defeat against GM Dmitry Jakovenko of Russia in the second round of Aerosvit International Chess tournament here yesterday.

Sasikiran, who started off with a rocking victory over Alexander Onsichuk of the USA, was completely out of sorts against Jakovenko and lost a theoretically drawn rook and pawns endgame after a long battle.

Alexei Shirov of Spain, meanwhile, emerged as the sole leader with his second successive triumph in the tournament.

On the receiving end was Lenier Dominguez of Cuba who was outdone in a complex middle game.

Shirov took his tally to two points with his second successive victory and is now followed by Vassily Ivanchuk and Sergey Karjakin of Ukraine and Jakovenko who all have 1.5 points apiece. —
PTI

BRIEFLY

Socceroos seek Waugh’s advice
Melbourne: Australia’s soccer team has turned to former cricket captain Steve Waugh for advice on dealing with tough conditions of the sub-continent as part of its preparations for next month’s Asian Cup.

The Socceroos are wary of the heat and tough playing conditions that await them at the championship, which starts next month. The Aussies will be based in Bangkok initially and could play in Vietnam, Malaysia and Indonesia depending on their progress in the tournament. —
PTI

Asian Grand Prix
Guwahati: The second leg of the 2007 Asian Athletics Grand Prix will be held at the Sarusajai Stadium here on June 23 with around 200 athletes from 20 countries, including nine Olympians, scheduled to participate.

India’s ace long jumper Anju Bobby George, who did not figure in the Bangkok leg as her event was not on the schedule, would participate in the meet, which has 22 events.

Some of the other Olympians are china’s Li Yanxi, Wu Tao, Wen Yongyi, Tong Xiaomei, Xue Juan, and Olga Tereshkova and Marina Aitova of Kazakhstan.

The third and final leg of the Asian Grand Prix would be held in Pune on June 27. —
PTI

The website would initially have 500 pages containing all the details about Mumbai cricket, including tournaments some of which are more than half a century old and players with their career stats, according to MCA sources.

Strangely, the website of the BCCI has not yet seen the light of the day though the board had announced long ago that it was in the pipeline. — PTI

Edwards fined
Dubai: West Indies pacer Fidel Edwards has been fined 15 per cent of his match fee for swearing in frustration during his side’s fourth Test match against England.

ICC match referee Alan Hurst found Edwards guilty of using inappropriate language in a hearing after play concluded in Durham on Tuesday.

Edwards was found to have breached clause 1.4 of the ICC Code of Conduct, which relates to “using language that is obscene, offensive or insulting.” —
PTI

Spikers lose
New Delhi: India lost to Iran in their opening match of the second Asian Central Zone Volleyball Championship in Islamabad. The Indians lost 22-25, 22-25, 25-20, 23-25 in an 85-minute long contest on Tuesday. The Indians dominated the attack with P.S. Srikanth and Gurchand but were undone by an unstable block and defence. India will take on Sri Lanka on Thursday. —
PTI